France, Britain push for helicopter ban, sanctions on Syria
2016-12-22 16:34:13.0
UNITED NATIONS, United States, Dec. 22 : (AFP) - France and Britain are pushing the UN Security Council to ban the sale of helicopters to Syria and to impose the first sanctions over the use of chemical weapons in the five-year war.
A draft resolution obtained by AFP on Wednesday calls
for asset freezes and travel bans against four Syrian officials and 10 entities
including a Syrian research center tied to chemical weapons development.
Diplomats however said the measure is certain to be
vetoed by Russia, Syria's ally, which has blocked council action on Syria with
six vetoes so far.A vote at the council is expected as early as next week.
A joint investigation by the United Nations and the
Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) found that several
units of the Syrian army had used toxic weapons against three villages in
northern Syria in 2014 and 2015.
It was the first time an international probe blamed President
Bashar Al-Assad's forces after years of denial from Damascus.
Government helicopters flying from two
regime-controlled air bases dropped chlorine barrel-bombs on the villages of
Qmenas, Talmenes and Sarmin, the panel's latest report said.
Chlorine use as a weapon is banned under the Chemical
Weapons Convention, which Syria joined in 2013 under pressure from
Russia.British Ambassador Matthew Rycroft said there must be "significant
measures" to follow up on the panel's findings and called for sanctions."We'll
be pursuing that with our council colleagues and circulating a draft
shortly," he told reporters.
Russia however has said that the report's findings are
"inconclusive" and not strong enough to warrant sanctions.
Under the proposed measure, the council would demand
that all UN member-states "prevent the direct or indirect supply, sale or
transfer" to the Syrian military and government of "any helicopters,
or related materiel including spare parts."
A UN committee that oversees a sanctions blacklist for
Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State would also be tasked with adding names of those
responsible for a mustard gas attack in Syria in 2015.The UN panel concluded
that IS fighters were behind that attack.
The mandate for the joint investigation was recently
extended for another year to allow it to investigate chemical attacks that have
been reported in Syria this year.The OPCW is investigating more than 20 alleged
cases of use of toxic chemicals in Syria since August, the director general
told AFP last month.
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